110 " 'Q /, . :., \"l \:' ',.' iff" :.:;:/ ." :.....::... " .':, ::?: NOTHING TAKES THE PLACE OF GOOD MUSIC , .". -:: ^-.:. w " ;, .... o. " ".,.,;:, ,'.. And because it sells over a million families in metropolitan New York for advertisers like Plymouth motor cars. . . NOTHING TAKES THE PLACE OF Rad o Stahon of The New York Times fit for anything that journalism had to offer, and he moved swiftly to the ed- itorship of the paper. Soon after the war, y he hecame head of the Kemsley group of pdpers in Glasgow (hesides the Rec- ord, this Included the Evenzng N f'WS and the Sunday JV1 azl), taking a Sedt on the board of directors alongsIde Lord Kemsley, His LordshIp's several sons, and the Marchioness of Huntly. Liv- ingstone's hair had turned gray since the last tIme I saw him, and he had ac- qUIred the thickened figure that makes the proper fdçade for a top executive in his earl)! forties, but behind this, I found, was still the eager reporter [ knew. F or many weeks in the spring of 1 941, Livingstone told me, he had rarely been out of Kemsley House, the building on Hope Street, in the center of Glasgow, where aU th ree of the Kemsley papers were published. His bed was in his office dnd he ate in a canteen in the building. The strain was telling on hIm, and, war news and air raids notwithstanding, he finally de- cided to take a weekend off. He had evacuated his young wife, with their baby, to her native town of Callander, about forty miles north of Glasgow, in the lovely Tro')sachs district, of Roh Ro) fame. On Saturday, May 10th, Living- stone joined her there. The next after- noon, they put the baby in its carnage and set out for a walk along a quiet country road. They had not gone very far when a car drew û.p beside them and the driver asked "Are you Mr. Living- stone?" Livingstone said he was, and the man told him that there was à tele- phone call for bim from Glasgow. Liv- ingstone got Into the car, promising his wife to come back and resume their walk after he had dealt with this inter- ruption On the ride in to Callander, LIv- ingstone asked the driver who he was and how he had tracked him down "I'm Mr Cameron, the plumber," the man replied. Livingstone said that that was very interesting but it didn't an- swer hIS second question. "Och, aye," said Mr. Cameron. "The exchange didna know ye, so they rang me. In a wee place, the plumber usually knows pretty well everybody. They said it was a newspaper in Glasgow calling, so I figured it must be for the man Bett) Hart was marrIed on." Bett} Hart was Mrs. Livingstone's maIden name. "I'd heard he worked for a newspaper. I went round to the house, but they said the two of you had gone for a walk with the Daby. I gues')ed you'd come down this road. It's the nicest for a qUIet walk on a Sunday." The call was from a Record re- FEßRIIARY 1 , 1957 ikM REEVES ffi I <;, ) ,.., '- ." , . "", : > ., ,!>" =t \ .4 , .. \ \ , ' ,: (' ;= '., \ \, II 'p ! j , " " , ; ,\ j , ! ' <, .'>, \\ . J r ! ' . ,, .. "<^ 0.. ::::o'J. ..:;:r:".. Ox".. . ' ! . 1 ,: ii," '. '.' ! ".;,: '-;:::': :' : :",:". $,,:f REGIMENTAL STRIPES . . . woven of a fine.. combed cotton expressly for Catalina by Reeves in a comfurtable sun-and-::,wim set. Shirts, about $7. Matching trunks, about $5 to $7. At Wallach Stores or write Cata- lina, Division W, Los Angeles 13. Fabric by REEVES BROTHERS Inc., New Y or 18 THE pea! J :S:NOST. A distinguished address in the heart of the Near North Side's Famous Gold Coast. Just a whisper from the Lake! :-":,, ..."? ::: . ",/'1" :".. ", '<, BEST . , ':jte6hfueu,. SELLER ... . ::, d ", '. '" New album! ': :::,art " ':'fJ, t.rU'llJl!J?t ., 12 great 'r;I ;A: : j> , '. WIll malee you Right At Home 14 EAST 44TH STREfl ... LUNCHEON COCKTAILS DINNER SUPPER